Literature DB >> 33464935

Hospitalizations and healthcare costs associated with rifaximin versus lactulose treatment among commercially insured patients with hepatic encephalopathy in the United States.

Michael L Volk1, Rebecca Burne2, Annie Guérin2, Sherry Shi2, George J Joseph3, Zeev Heimanson3, Maliha Ahmad4.   

Abstract

AIMS: To assess healthcare costs and hospitalization rates associated with rifaximin therapy versus lactulose alone among patients at risk for hepatic encephalopathy (HE). METHODS AND MATERIALS: IBM Marketscan Commercial and Optum's de-identified Clinformatics Data Mart databases were used separately to identify commercially insured HE patients treated with rifaximin or lactulose alone, using an algorithm developed with clinical experts. HE-related hospitalizations were defined based on an algorithm using diagnosis codes and diagnosis-related group codes. HE-related/all-cause hospital admissions/days and healthcare costs were compared between rifaximin and lactulose episodes using incidence rate ratios and adjusted cost differences.
RESULTS: In Marketscan, there were 13,515 [Optum: 5,217] rifaximin episodes and 9,946 [4,897] lactulose alone episodes included. Yearly rates of HE-related hospital admissions decreased by 33% [34%] when treated with rifaximin versus lactulose alone, and rates of HE-related hospital days similarly decreased by 43% [57%]. Yearly rates of all-cause hospital admissions decreased by 27% [27%]; rates of all-cause hospital days decreased by 33% [37%] during rifaximin episodes versus lactulose alone. This translated to $2,417 [$2,301] and $173 [$397] lower total mean medical costs and HE-related hospital costs per-patient-per-month, respectively (p < .05). Despite increased pharmacy costs associated with rifaximin, there was no change in total healthcare costs. Patients adherent to rifaximin incurred $2,891 [$2,340] lower total healthcare costs than non-adherent patients. In a simulated plan of 1 million lives, if 50% of HE patients treated with lactulose alone had rifaximin added on and were adherent to rifaximin therapy, the total cost savings would be $7.5 [$6.1] million per year ($0.62 [$0.50] per-member-per-month).
CONCLUSIONS: Patients incurred significantly lower rates of HE-related and all-cause hospitalizations during rifaximin versus lactulose episodes, resulting in lower facility and professional costs. Cost savings may be possible if rifaximin adherence is improved in HE patients. LIMITATIONS: The study is subject to limitations common to claims-based analyses.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Costs; I; I1; I10; I19; hepatic encephalopathy; hospitalization; lactulose; rifaximin

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Year:  2021        PMID: 33464935     DOI: 10.1080/13696998.2021.1877148

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Med Econ        ISSN: 1369-6998            Impact factor:   2.448


  2 in total

Review 1.  Changing Epidemiology of Cirrhosis and Hepatic Encephalopathy.

Authors:  Jeremy Louissaint; Sasha Deutsch-Link; Elliot B Tapper
Journal:  Clin Gastroenterol Hepatol       Date:  2022-08       Impact factor: 13.576

2.  Is rifaximin better than nonabsorbable disaccharides in hepatic encephalopathy?: A meta-analysis.

Authors:  Junxiong Cheng; Yafang Chen; Wenfu Cao; Guoqing Zuo
Journal:  Medicine (Baltimore)       Date:  2021-12-23       Impact factor: 1.817

  2 in total

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